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Dirk De Ridder

Department of Surgical Sciences, Section of Neurosurgery, Dunedin School of Medicine, University of Otago, New Zealand.

2 papers in the library · 4 citations · publishing 2023-2025

Papers

Self-regulation training for people with knee osteoarthritis: a protocol for a feasibility randomised control trial (MiNT trial).

Frontiers in pain research (Lausanne, Switzerland) January 1, 2023 Ramakrishnan Mani, Divya Bharatkumar Adhia, Sharon Awatere et al. 3 citations

Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is a chronic pain condition linked to altered brain activity. Self-regulation training, such as mindfulness meditation (MM) and electroencephalography neurofeedback (EEG-NF), may reduce pain. This double-blind, three-arm randomized controlled feasibility trial will compare MM plus usual care, EEG-NF plus usual care, and usual care alone. Participants with knee OA will be recruited from the community and healthcare practices; interventions involve 20-minute sessions, four times weekly for three weeks. Feasibility measures include recruitment, adherence, retention, and safety. Secondary outcomes are assessed at baseline, immediately post-intervention, and at three months. Qualitative interviews will explore participants' experiences, barriers, facilitators, and acceptability, including Māori perspectives. Results will inform a full randomized controlled trial.

Tinnitus, lucid dreaming and awakening. An online survey and theoretical implications.

Hearing research March 1, 2025 Robin Guillard, Nicolas Dauman, Aurélien Cadix et al. 1 citation

About 95% of people with tinnitus do not hear the phantom sound while dreaming, confirming earlier reports. In a survey of 148 tinnitus patients who could recall dreams, only 5.4% heard their tinnitus during dreams; these individuals tended to have higher tinnitus burden, more stress, and more often had hearing loss or related health conditions. Among the 12.2% who experienced lucid dreams, 38% could perceive their tinnitus during those dreams, strongly linked to also hearing external sounds in the lucid state. Upon waking, most perceived tinnitus instantly, though 17.2% reported being awakened by it and 10% said it could temporarily stop during nocturnal awakenings. The findings suggest that gating of external auditory information during dreams acts as a tinnitus on-off switch.